Human cloning ban
Nineteen European nations signed a pact in France on January 12 approving a ban on human cloning. French officials said that the protocol was an annex to the Council of Europe's convention and also the first compulsory juridical instrument banning cloning of humans.
The agreement was signed after the French president Jacques Chirac called for an international ban on human cloning. us president Bill Clinton also called on the Congress to vote a bill banning such experiments in the us for at least five years. The countries which signed the agreement are Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Iceland, Italy Latvia, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Moldova, Norway, Portugal, Romania, San Marino, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Turkey. Significantly, Britain and Germany have not signed the ban.
A leading Russian geneticist, Lev Ernst who is vice-president of the Russian Academy of Agriculture, contradicted his colleagues from other nations a day after the ban was signed. He said that cloning would be acceptable if properly controlled by the State. "A well researched breakthrough must not be banned
Related Content
- Hotspot autoimmune T cell receptor binding underlies pathogen and insulin peptide cross-reactivity
- Transplant of pig organs in humans coming soon?
- Cloning of human organs just got a step closer
- South Korean Scientists Create Glowing Dog: Report
- Vigour maintaining seeds for farmers
- Bill likely on cloning soon